Apache Log Files Explained

Configure Web Logs in Apache
Author’s Note: While most of this piece discusses configuration options for any operating system Apache supports, some of the content will be Unix/Linux (*nix) specific, which now includes Macintosh OS X and its underlying Unix kernel.

One of the many pieces of the Website puzzle is Web logs. Traffic analysis is central to most Websites, and the key to getting the most out of your traffic analysis revolves around how you configure your Web logs. Apache is one of the most — if not the most — powerful open source solutions for Website operations. You will find that Apache’s Web logging features are flexible for the single Website or for managing numerous domains requiring Web log analysis.

For the single site, Apache is pretty much configured for logging in the default install. The initial httpd.conf file (found in /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf in most cases) should have a section on logs that looks similar to this (Apache 2.0.x), with descriptive comments for each item. Your default logs folder will be found in /etc/httpd/logs . This location can be changed when dealing with multiple Websites, as we’ll see later. For now, let’s review this section of log configuration.

Error Logs
The error log contains messages sent from Apache for errors encountered during the course of operation. This log is very useful for troubleshooting Apache issues on the server side.

Apache Log Tip: If you are monitoring errors or testing your server, you can use the command line to interactively watch log entries. Open a shell session and type “tail –f /path/to/error_log” . This will show you the last few entries in the file and also continue to show new entries as they occur.

There are no real customization options available, other than telling Apache where to establish the file, and what level of error logging you seek to capture. First, let’s look at the error log configuration code from httpd.conf.

ErrorLog logs/error_log

You may wish to store all error-related information in one error log. If so, the above is fine, even for multiple domains. However, you can specify an error log file for each individual domain you have. This is done in the <VirtualHost> container with an entry like this:

If you are responsible for reviewing error log files as a server administrator, it is recommended that you maintain a single error log. If you’re hosting for clients, and they are responsible for monitoring the error logs, it’s more convenient to specify individual error logs they can access at their own convenience.

The setting that controls the level of error logging to capture follows below.

LogLevel warn

Apache’s definitions for their error log levels are as follows:

Tracking Website Activity
Often by default, Apache will generate three activity logs: access, agent and referrer. These track the accesses to your Website, the browsers being used to access the site and referring urls that your site visitors have arrived from.

It is commonplace now to utilize Apache’s “combined” log format, which compiles all three of these logs into one logfile. This is very convenient when using traffic analysis software as a majority of these third-party programs are easiest to configure and schedule when only dealing with one log file per domain.

Let’s break down the code in the combined log format and see what it all means.

LogFormat starts the line and simply tells Apache you are defining a log file type (or nickname), in this case, combined. Now let’s look at the cryptic symbols that make up this log file definition.

To review all of the available configuration codes for generating a custom log, see Apache’s [1] docs on the module_log_config , which powers log files in Apache.

Apache Log Tip: You could capture more from the HTTP header if you so desired. A full listing and definition of data in the header is found at the World Wide Web Consortium [2] .

For a single Website, the default entry would suffice:

CustomLog logs/access_log combined

However, for logging multiple sites, you have a few options. The most common is to identify individual log files for each domain. This is seen in the example below, again using the log directive within the <VirtualHost> container for each domain.

In the above example, we have three domains with three unique Web logs (using the combined format we defined earlier). A traffic analysis package could then be scheduled to process these logs and generate reports for each domain independently.

This method works well for most hosts. However, there may be situations where this could become unmanageable. Apache recommends a special single log file for large virtual host environments and provides a tool for generating individual logs per individual domain.

We will call this log type the cvh format, standing for “common virtual host.” Simply by adding a %v (which stands for virtual host) to the beginning of the combined log format defined earlier and giving it a new nickname of cvh, we can compile all domains into one log file, then automatically split them into individual log files for processing by a traffic analysis package.

In this case, we do not make any CustomLog entries in the <VirtualHost> containers and simply have one log file generated by Apache. A program created by Apache called split_logfile is included in the src/support directory of your Apache sources. If you did not compile from source or do not have the sources, you can get the Perl script [3] .

The individual log files created from your master log file will be named for each domain (virtual host) and look like: virtualhost.log.

Log Rotation
Finally, we want to address log rotation. High traffic sites will generate very large log files, which will quickly swallow up valuable disk space on your server. You can use log rotation to manage this process.

There are many ways to handle log rotation, and various third-party tools are available as well. However, we’re focusing on configurations native to Apache, so we will look at a simple log rotation scheme here. I’ll include links to more flexible and sophisticated log rotation options in a moment.

This example uses a rudimentary shell script to move the current Web log to an archive log, compresses the old file and keeps an archive for as long as 12 months, then restarts Apache with a pause to allow the log files to be switched out.

This code can be copied into a file called logrotate.sh , and placed inside the folder where your web.log file is stored (or whatever you name your log file, e.g. access_log, etc.). Just be sure to modify for your log file names and also chmod (change permissions on the file) to 755 so it becomes an executable.

This works fine for a single busy site. If you have more complex requirements for log rotation, be sure to see some of the following sites. In addition, many Linux distributions now come with a log rotation included. For example, Red Hat 9 comes with logrotate.d , a log rotation daemon which is highly configurable. To find out more, on your Linux system with logrotate.d installed, type man logrotate .